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Passport Office’s shame

EDITOR, The Tribune

MY recent experience in trying to renew an e-passport for my juvenile daughter has rendered me almost ashamed to be a Bahamian.

I applied for this passport renewal on March 23 and was given a pick-up date of May 5. Based on what I was hearing, I decided to give the passport office an extra month, and went back on June 6 at 8am.

Immediately I found myself no.41 on a line of persons who had come to pick up their passports. Tempted to leave, I decided to remain when I discovered that the no.1 person had arrived at 5am.

We were out in the elements awaiting the opening of the office at 8.30.Thankfully, at about 8.20, office personnel ushered in the elderly, the visually pregnant and those with very young children. Then they started allowing in 10 persons at a time. I eventually got inside the building and after about one hour was told that my daughter’s passport was not ready and I should return to pick it up the week of June 27.

I reported back to the passport office on June 29 at 7.30am and this time found myself at no.15 on the line. Every time I had to face that line, I found it to be dehumanising. Bahamian citizens lining up for hours outside under the blazing summer sun just to pick up a passport.

By now I had been noticing that at all hours of the day when I passed this place, there were large numbers of persons outside on that hellish line.

But I digress. I got inside at about 9.15am. Shortly afterwards the skies opened up and the rain poured down on about 70 men, women and children outside. Although I was on the inside, I was traumatised by this and actually felt guilty that while I was enjoying air-conditioned comfort, my fellow citizens were outside getting soaked to their underwear because after being on that line for hours, they did not want to lose their position by leaving to seek shelter.

After waiting for about an hour and a quarter, I was told that once again the passport was not ready and I should return on July 1.

On leaving the building I observed that the rain had abated and the sun was now out in full blaze, drying off the people that the rain had soaked shortly before. You would imagine that only cattle are treated like that; however, the reality is that unbelievably this is what is happening to Bahamians in 2016, some 43 years after independence.

We have been issuing passports since 1973 and we are well aware of the summer rush. It should not take a rocket scientist to figure out that if 120 persons are going to show up at any one point and you only have indoor accommodation for 40 then you need to re-locate.   

Getting back to my story, I returned on July 1, this time with a firm determination that I was going to get that renewed passport that day at all cost. I got there early again, faced the line again, eventually got inside and was eventually advised that - yet again - the document was not ready.

I was given a choice to remain or to return at 1pm, when I would not have to stand outside in line. I chose the latter, and for the fourth time, the travel document was not ready. Determined to stick it out, I left the passport office with my daughter’s passport at 6.40pm that day.

On one of the days when I was making those time-wasting trips to the passport office, I conversed with a gentleman who told me that his Jamaican wife recently took a three-day trip to her homeland and returned with her renewed passport. Jamaica is a country of four million people. Our population is less than 400,000.

Why can’t we get even close to the Jamaican standard in passport renewals since we love to compare ourselves with them and other Caribbean nations in so many other areas?

But it gets worse. From conversations I had with other persons during this experience, I discovered that the government is actually profiting from its own inefficiency by way of the $200 “rush” fee. If we were capable of producing or renewing passports in a timely manner in the first instance, there would be no need for a “rush” passport fee.

What is worse, many persons who paid the $200 in the interest of time after their original or subsequent pickup dates were not honoured, still did not get their documents on the promised “rush” date, and were not refunded their monies if they requested a refund. That action by the passport office, a branch of our government, is akin to the mafia. It is either extortion or stealing by reason of service. Either way, it is a terrible thing for a government agency to be doing to Bahamians.

If the manner in which our passport office operates in 2016 is indicative of the remainder of the public service, then I can easily see why 43 years post-Independence this country is no better off that it actually is. All of our governments should hang their collective heads in shame and disgrace. We change governments, but the systems do not change.

This horrific experience is just one of several reasons why I did not celebrate Independence this year.

ROOSEVELT “WELLY” FORBES

Nassau,

July 11, 2016.

Comments

Economist 7 years, 9 months ago

Thank you Mr. Forbes for speaking out.
The only way things will change in our country is if Bahamians stand up and speak out.

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Sickened 7 years, 9 months ago

Why can’t we get even close to the Jamaican standard in passport renewals since we love to compare ourselves with them and other Caribbean nations in so many other areas?

I'll tell you why... because other countries are fighting corruption while our politicians are just now taking full advantage of their power.

I believe our politicians are ABSOLUTE CRIMINALS. I believe them to be DISGUSTING HUMAN BEINGS!!!

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EasternGate 7 years, 9 months ago

You have reasons to be "sickened"

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ohdrap4 7 years, 9 months ago

similar experiences are to be had by expatriates who wait for all kinds of permits and applications at the immigration department as well for years.

but people do not care beause they are foreigners.

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Honestman 7 years, 9 months ago

The performance of the passport office is a national disgrace. Fred Mitchell should hang his head in shame over this story. Why do we put up with this? In this technological age you should be able to obtain a passport within 8 weeks max OR be able to pay an express fee and receive your passport SAME DAY. Mitchell should focus on solving this vexing problem instead of wasting his time irritating the USA with stupid advisories. Honestly, Mitchell could never cut it in a first world country.

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Sickened 7 years, 9 months ago

True story... a buddy of mine got their passport in less than 3 hours about 1 month ago - start to finish - from application, to getting passport pictures taken, to submitting old passport, to getting new passport. So it is possible to get it quick.

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themessenger 7 years, 9 months ago

A friend of mine recently renewed their British passport on line and via courier, Fedex, and had it returned to them within three weeks, see the difference between civilization & third world.

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Sickened 7 years, 9 months ago

I can personally attest to that!

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Well_mudda_take_sic 7 years, 9 months ago

I remember dining one evening with Levi Gibson (since deceased) who told me about the unfortunate hardships experienced by Fred and his brother Matthew in their upbringing. Levi remarked that Fred suffered from a grossly inflated and perverse sense of self (a common symptom for pseudo-intellects, i.e. people who think they are much smarter than they actually are) whereas Matthew undoubtedly was the smarter of the two but bent in such a way that would result in him ending up in serious trouble sooner rather than later. Levi was prescient. Matthew shortly thereafter ended up doing a stint in Fox Hill Prison for stealing $1 million plus from his employer at the time (Chemical Bank who have since left the Bahamas) and Fred has since gone on to wreak havoc and great embarrassment to the diplomatic standing of our country in the global community. These two brothers have a lot in common with the two McWeeny brothers, Sean and Paul. No gooders to the core no matter how much they may do to appear saintly in our society!

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berryj 7 years, 6 months ago

We were out in the elements awaiting the opening of the office at 8.30.Thankfully, at about 8.20, office personnel ushered in the elderly, the visually pregnant and those with very young children. Then they started allowing in 10 persons at a time. I eventually got inside the building and after about one hour was told that my daughter’s passport was not ready and I should return to pick it up the week of June 27.

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